| displacement |
the redirecting (usually outside of concious intent) of thoughts , feelings and impulses from an object that gives rise to those thoughts, feelings, etc. to a safer, or more psychologically acceptable one.
Ãâó: www2.med.umich.edu/psychiatry/umdc/defquery.cfm
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|---|---|
| displacement |
Freudian term for the replacement of one psychic figure with a tangentially related image: for example, a dream about seeking to get a novel published by Penguin Books resulting in a dream about penguins(!) Jacques Lacan likens metonymy in language and literature to displacement.
Ãâó: www.adamranson.freeserve.co.uk/critical%20concepts...
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| displacement |
A change in position. A displacement may be a translation a rotation or a combination of those.
Ãâó: urban.arch.virginia.edu/~km6e/references/glossary/...
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| displacement |
(psych.) - Defense mechanism. Redirection of emotion. A person may become angry with their boss, and take their anger out on a co-worker. Assaulting innanimate objects is displacing frustration and anger in a
Ãâó: www.reasoned.org/glossary.htm
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| displacement o. |
surgical division of a bone and shifting of the divided ends to change the alignment of the bone or to alter weight-bearing stresses.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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